Friday 15 September 2017

Sussex v Derbyshire day 3

Derbyshire 338 and 322-8 (Podmore 66 not, Hosein 52, Critchley 51, Slater 45, Whittingham 5-80)

Sussex 271

Derbyshire lead by 389 runs

Based on their four-day form this season, I said that Derbyshire would lose this game. Yet I am pleased to say that they go into the final day in rude health, after an outstanding team display.

There was much to be proud of in the efforts of a young batting line-up yesterday, in which almost everyone batted time and made runs. With the home side needing a win to maintain their promotion aspirations, they will go for anything today and our task was to make their chase a challenge.

They could still get them, of course, against an attack that is some way removed from experienced. Sussex bat long and powerfully, but the crowd at Hove are set for an exciting last day with fair weather forecast.

The resilience of the young Derbyshire side was a joy to follow yesterday. Much seemed to depend on Wayne Madsen and when he went the likelihood of a collapse seemed high, Yet Alex Hughes batted time before being dismissed and Ben Slater did likewise, before being beaten by a terrific yorker from the Derby-born Stuart Whittingham.

Then came a partnership between Matt Critchley, who has grown considerably as a batsman this summer, and Harvey Hosein, who has spent most of it in the second team. I have previously written that Hosein had to bide his time then take his opportunity when it came, something he has done in this game. An unbeaten 38 in the first innings and 52 yesterday saw him do exactly that and he is hard to drop now, assuming his glove work is of a similar standard.

Both he and Critchley went after making their fifty, exposing a tail that suggested fragility and with the lead not yet conclusive. Yet Harry Podmore, with the career average of eight that I mentioned after the first day, confounded pundits with a career-best unbeaten 66 that was more than three times his personal best. With good support from Will Davis, who also made a career-best score, the lead approached 400 by the close, with a wicket in hand should we choose to bat on today.

The ease with which we made the runs suggested that the home side might do well in today's run chase, but I have nothing but respect for the way a young side went about its work here. With Billy Godleman unable to bat and out for the rest of the season, only Wayne Madsen, Hardus Viljoen and Luis Reece are over 27, with much of the side considerably younger.

Well done gentlemen, you have done us proud here.

Now finish the job today.

3 comments:

  1. I am writing this post at 09.35 in the morning Peakfan.
    Let's take a gamble and declare on our overnight score. 386 is a good lead, and if they get'em, good luck to 'em. We have enough options for Madders to use. Viljoen, Davis, Podmore, Hughes, Qadri, Critchley, Reece, and of course himself.
    Our main aim for the rest of the season is to avoid the dreaded 'wooden spoon'. With Leicestershire looking at a defeat at Worcestershire, and us having a game in hand, we are in the driving seat to achieve this.
    Finally on this game, I couldn't agree more with you regarding the youngsters that have come up through the academy. When they perform like this, they are a credit to the club, and rubber stamp its desire to produce our own players. Let's hope for consistency from them for the rest of the season and beyond.

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  2. Dry and bright in Hove with a good forecast, so every chance for us to finish this off. I'm not sure we'll have an immediate declaration. Sussex will be waiting for it, have openers padded up and mentally prepared, so it will cause maximum vexation and confusion to bat on for two overs, with Sussex pads being ripped off and hastily put on again. This is a thoroughly dispirited Sussex team who are going to have to chase anything they're set to keep promotion hopes alive, so time isn't an issue. Just hope we have enough 12th men - Hosein took a really bad blow on his finger just before he was out and it wouldn't surprise me if he couldn't keep, and Hughes was limping after being hit on his foot.But good day in prospect and my optimism from the first day remains intact.

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  3. They will have agreed what was happening well before a padding up stage, notoveryet!

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